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THE NINE POWERS OF
DREAMING
By Robert Moss
Have you ever said, “it’s only a
dream”? While we often dismiss dreams, or fail to make room for them
in the hurry of our daily lives, dreams can be a fabulous source of
guidance, healing and juice for any day. Dreams offer us nine
tremendous gifts. Check the list below and see how these have worked
in the lives of some very interesting people:
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We solve problems in our sleep
Jeff Taylor woke in the middle
of the night from a dream in which he created an electronic bulletin
board that was lit up with eager job-hunters logging in from all
over the map. He scrawled the phrase “Monster board” on a pad in the
dark, then rushed to an all-night coffee shop and roughed out the
plan for what became the stunningly successful internet job agency,
Monster.com
If you want to solve a problem,
or need a fresh perspective, sleep on it. Write down your intention
(“I would like guidance on X”) before turning in, and be ready to
record something whenever you wake up. Even if you have forgotten
your dreams, you may find you have your solution.
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Dreams coach us for future challenges and opportunities.
John Lennon dreamed he read his
own obituary and was shocked to find that he had murdered himself,
in front of the Dakota on Central Park. Eleven months later, he was
murdered in front of the Dakota by a demented fan who identified
with the Beatles star to the point where he married a Japanese
woman, collected the same type of art, and signed out of work the
day before the murder as “John Lennon”.
Lennon’s dream was precognitive;
it showed him a future event that was played out when the wannabe
John Lennon killed the real one. But dreams also give us early
warnings: they show us future challenges (and opportunities) that
may or may not play out, depending on whether we read the message
correctly and take appropriate action. I believe that my own life
has been saved from fatal road accidents on three occasions because
I was able to use dream previews as travel advisories.
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Dreams show us what our bodies need to stay well.
Wanda Burch’s dead father turned
up in a dream in a white medical coat yelling at her, “Get to a
doctor immediately! You have cancer!” She acted on the warning,
getting medical help early enough to survive the disease. Her
survival chances were greatly enhanced as she developed the ability
to harvest healing imagery from her dreams, as recounted in her book
She Who Dreams.
We have a wise physician and
healer available in our dreamtime every night. Our dream doctor can
predict possible symptoms long before they develop, prescribe
appropriate treatments, and give us images the body can believe in
to make us well or keep us well. Our dream doctor makes house calls
and doesn’t charge a cent!
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Dreams hold up a magic mirror to our actions and behavior
Renowned Swiss analyst Carl Jung
was impressed by the experience of a wealthy businessman who was
about to embark on a new venture when he dreamed that he got himself
so dirty that his arms were covered in black muck, up above the
elbows. He concluded that the new project was “dirty business”, and
abandoned it.
Dreams give us an objective
picture of our current actions and attitudes, and show us where
they are likely to lead. When I was leading a very fast-track life,
I dreamed I took a corner at insanely high speed in a beautiful
racing-green Jaguar. Then everything came to a stop. A doctor in a
white coat turned up and inspected my engine. He cautioned me that I
ought to be much more careful. “If you smash up this vehicle, don’t
imagine you’ll get one as good any time soon.” I took the advice!
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Dreams are a secret laboratory
Nobel laureate Wolfgang Pauli, a
pioneer of quantum physics, said that dreams were his “secret
laboratory.” He recorded many thousands of dreams, and they guided
not only his work in physics, but his researches in other fields
such as philology and the interaction of mind and matter.
Many of our greatest
scientists, inventors and discoverers have been world-class
dreamers. The list includes Isaac Newton, physicist Niels Bohr,
chemist Friedrich Kekule, inventor Elias Howe (who dreamed up the
first practical sewing machine needle, giving us the modern garment
industry) and Albert Einstein, who woke on a spring morning with the
special theory of relativity clear in his head.
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Dreams are a creative studio
Larry
Page, co-founder of Google, says that the idea for the search engine
that became a multi-billion behemoth first came to him in a dream.
He offered this advice to new graduates at his alma mater, the
University of Michigan: “If you have a big dream, grab it.”
Stephanie Meyer started writing the phenomenally successful
Twilight series because of a dream that drove her to the
keyboard right away, and is essentially the story of chapter 13
(“Confessions”) in the original novel. The famous architect Frank
Gehry dreams up building designs. He says he based part of
his design for a cancer center on dream conversations with a woman
friend who had died from breast cancer. He dreamed his dead friend
told to make his design softer, to appeal to women patients; in the
finished version he worked in shapes derived from the folds of
fabric in a shawl.
To be creative is to bring
something new into the world. Whatever our field of interest – from
a dinner party menu to the next leap in nanotechnology – our dreams
provide a creative studio where we try out new ideas and make
connections that escape the everyday mind.
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Dreams help us mend our divided selves
New York actor and playwright
Roger Ziegler dreamed he looked in a mirror and saw many selves,
aspects of himself at many ages, each bringing different gifts. He
was thrilled as he watched them embrace and join together, becoming
a single being – all except a shy five-year-old he had to rescue
later on.
Our dreams put us in touch
with many parts of ourselves, including shadow aspects we may have
sought to repress or deny, and also that larger and wiser Self who
can help us grow.
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Dreaming is a key to better relationships
Schoolteacher Marybeth Gurske
dreamed that her heart was opened, and she saw an “energy cord”
running from her open heart to her dream partner, the ultimate
“Mister Right.” She painted that beautiful image. When she dated
men, she checked whether the energy in the encounter matched that of
the dream, and moved on fast when it did not. Every night, she
imagined herself being drawn, inexorably, by that heart-cord towards
the man of her dreams. Fourteen months later, she found him and they
are now married.
Dreams can introduce our life
partners. They can also put juice and depth into an existing
relationship, or show us when it is time to cut our losses and move
on. Sharing dreams in a family circle or among friends or workmates
is a great way to build stronger connections, solve mutual problems
– and have fabulous fun. Through dreams, we can also heal our
relations with our departed, bringing a blessed sense of
forgiveness, closure and continuing or reviving love.
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Dreams recall us to our larger our purpose
Australian Aborigines say that
the Big stories are hunting the right people to tell them, like
predators stalking in the woods. Dreams put us in touch with our
bigger stories and our larger life purpose. When we can make a
connection between life’s everyday dramas and a bigger story, we
find courage and direction for whatever life throws at us.
© Robert Moss. All Rights
Reserved |